jeudi 22 mai 2025

La vie quotidienne au début du Moyen Âge en Angleterre

Cultivating the Earth, Nurturing the Body and Soul: Daily Life in Early Medieval England
Essays in Honour of Debby Banham


Christine Voth (ed)

Brepols
Pages: 336 p.
Size:156 x 234 mm
Illustrations:1 b/w, 4 col.
Language(s):English
Publication Year:2025


How did food impact social relationships in early medieval England? What cultivation practices were followed, to produce the best possible food supplies? What was the cultural significance of bread? How was the human body nourished? When sickness inevitably occurred, where did one go, and who was consulted for healing? And how was spiritual health also protected? The essays gathered together in this exciting volume draw on a range of different disciplines, from early medieval economic and social history, to experimental archaeology and medieval medicine, to offer a unique overview into day-to-day life in England nearly two millennia ago.

Taking as their starting point the broad research interests of the volume’s honorand, Dr Debby Banham, contributors here offer new insights into the reproduction and ritual use of vernacular charms, examine the collation and translation of medieval medicine, elucidate monastic economies and production, and uncover the circumstances behind the production and transmission of medical manuscripts in early medieval England. Presenting new insights into agricultural practices and animal husbandry, monastic sign language and materia medica, plant knowledge and medical practices, the chapters within this volume not only offer a fitting tribute to Banham’s own groundbreaking work, but also shed new light on what it meant to nurture both body and soul in early medieval England.

mercredi 21 mai 2025

Histoires mondiales de la médecine sociale

Medicine on a Larger Scale. Global Histories of Social Medicine


Edited by Anne Kveim Lie, University of Oslo, Jeremy A. Greene, Johns Hopkins University, Warwick Anderson, University of Sydney

Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Online publication date:May 2025
Print publication year:2025
Online ISBN:9781009428514


In a world of growing health inequity and ecological injustice, how do we revitalize medicine and public health to tackle new problems? This groundbreaking collection draws together case studies of social medicine in the Global South, radically shifting our understanding of social science in healthcare. Looking beyond a narrative originating in nineteenth-century Europe, a team of expert contributors explores a far broader set of roots and branches, with nodes in Sub-Saharan Africa, South America, Oceania, the Middle East, and Asia. This plural approach reframes and decolonizes the study of social medicine, highlighting connections to social justice and health equity, social science and state formation, bottom-up community initiatives, grassroots movements, and an array of revolutionary sensibilities. As a truly global history, this book offers a more usable past to imagine a new politics of social medicine for medical professionals and healthcare workers worldwide. This title is also available as open access on Cambridge Core.

mardi 20 mai 2025

Galien et la question du métabolisme


Galen on the Question of Metabolism. Body and Environment in Ancience Medicine


Talk by Chiara Thumiger

27 May 2025 – 5 PM (CET)


In current medical-biological understanding, metabolism can be briefly defined as the combination of chemical reactions within the body’s cells which are aimed at changing food into energy.

In this sense, ancient medicine was cognisant of metabolism (despite being devoid of any concept of cellular physiology), and intended it as the challenging process of transforming food and drink into ‘body’.

Focusing on Galen, in this talk I intend to explore metabolism as concept of history of biology, using that datum as starting point for the exploration of a wider metaphorical level: the regulation of the relationship, material as much as conceptual, between self and non-self, and between human and environment (consumption and dietetics, processing, travel, trade, analogy and similarity).

These are equally important in the tradition of Hellenic medicine, and in the writings of Galen of Pergamon, who was fond of environmental imagery in his rhetorical presentation of medical doctrines.

To register for this event please follow the link:

https://csmbr.fondazionecomel.org/events/online-lectures/galen-on-the-question-of-metabolism/

lundi 19 mai 2025

Le langage médical et ses contextes dans l'Occident latin médiéval

Medical Words/Medical Worlds: Medical Language and its Contexts in the Medieval Latin West
 

Workshop


5-6 June 2025
Fitzwilliam College, University of Cambridge
 

Thursday, 5 June 2025
10.00-11.00 Visit to the Curious Cures Exhibition, Cambridge University Library
(Group 1)

13.00-13.30 Arrival with Coffee

13.30-14.00 Máire Ní Mhaonaigh, Welcome and Introduction to eDIL, the
Electronic Dictionary of the Irish Language
Deborah Hayden, Language, Education and Medical Learning in the Premodern Gaelic World: Lexicography and the LEIGHEAS Project

14.00-15.00 David Stifter, The Lexicography and Etymology of Medieval Irish Medical Terminology 

15.00-15.30 Coffee Break

15.30-16.30 Siobhán Barrett, Máel Eachlainn Mac an Leagha’s Concise and Beneficial Compendium

17.00-18.00 Visit to the Curious Cures Exhibition, Cambridge University Library
(Group 2)

18.30 Book Launch: Medicine in the Medieval North Atlantic World: Vernacular Texts and Traditions, ed. by Deborah Hayden and Sarah Baccianti (Brepols, 2025)


Friday, 6 June 2025
9.00-9.30 Arrival with Coffee

9.30-11.30 Keith Busby, ‘Yes, we have no bananas’: Jofroi de Waterford, Servais Copale, and the Import Trade in early Fourteenth-century Waterford Chiara Benati, Rational Surgery Translated into the Vernacular: The German Versions of Lanfranc of Milan’s Chirurgia magna

11.30-11.45 Tea, Coffee, etc.

11.45-12.45 Conan Doyle, Lost in Translation: Errors, Omissions and Variant
Translations of Latin Medical Recipes in Old English (850-1200)

12.45-13.45 Lunch

13.45-15.45 Debby Banham, ‘Then said he who wrote this book ...’: Dealing with
Plant Names in Bald’s Leechbook and Leechbook III
Diana Luft, English Elements in Medieval Welsh Medical Recipes

15.45-16.00 Coffee Break

16.00-18.00 Fleur Vigneron & Michèle Goyens, Creating a Vernacular Terminology in Mediaeval France: The Case of Botany and Medicine Sharon Arbuthnot, Medieval Irish Medical Vocabulary: Lives and
After-lives

dimanche 18 mai 2025

Théorie et pratique médicales dans l'Italie moderne

Medical Theory and Practice in Early Modern Italy


Sandra Cavallo, John Henderson (eds)

Brepols
Pages: approx. x + 189 p.
Size:220 x 280 mm
Illustrations:33 col.
Language(s):English
Publication Year:2025

This volume brings together scholars at the forefront of the latest developments in the history of medicine in Italy. In recent years, the traditional separation between studies of medical theory and studies of medical practice has increasingly given way to a more nuanced approach that problematizes the relationship between these fields, which is too often seen as mechanical. Building on these recent trends, this book sheds new light on the complex ways in which medical knowledge and medical experience interacted in a period characterized by the rise of empiricism, the expansion of scholarly interest in bedside medicine, and the challenges raised by the need to incorporate novel drugs into the classic paradigms of professional medicine. Focusing on a range of themes — bodies and diseases, medical treatment, pharmacy and public health — chapters in this volume challenge ingrained scholarly accounts of medical theory, highlight areas of innovation in medical treatment arising from vernacular practice, hospital experimentation, and the study of inanimate things, and the impact of these novelties on the more conservative official pharmacopeias. At the same time these essays remind us that medical innovation was not an independent process, but was also the product of commercial dynamics, political interests and religious and charitable discourses.

samedi 17 mai 2025

Philosophie de la médecine

Philosophie de la médecine


Appel à contributions

Philosophie antique 26 | 2026 
Date limite de soumission : 1er septembre 2025



La revue Philosophie antique lance un appel à contribution sur le thème « Philosophie de la médecine » pour son numéro de 2026.

Les contributions pourront porter sur tout sujet permettant d’élucider les rapports complexes qui unissent philosophie et médecine dans leur longue histoire commune dès les débuts de la philosophie antique. Empédocle, Alcméon de Crotone, Diogène d’Apollonie, Démocrite font entrer le champ de la médecine dans leur pensée philosophique. Au moment de sa constitution comme technique, en particulier au sein du Corpus Hippocratique, la médecine se pose toutefois la question de savoir si elle doit ou non prendre ses principes dans la philosophie, en particulier dans la philosophie de la nature. Ces débats sont prolongés et amplifiés à la période hellénistique et impériale, avec notamment la figure de Galien, lorsqu’il s’agit non seulement de fonder une épistémologie de la médecine interrogeant son rapport aux fondements de la connaissance et à la notion de vérité, mais aussi de questionner à nouveaux frais la partition des savoirs et le rôle de la médecine dans une architectonique générale fondée sur la distinction de l’épistemè et de l’empeiria.

On s’intéressera tout particulièrement aux propositions questionnant ces rapports, qu’ils soient envisagés en termes de hiérarchie, de rivalité, d’opposition ou comme une relation de coordination ; seront également appréciées les textes interrogeant la conception technique de la médecine, comprise comme art, voire simple pratique. L’appel est ainsi ouvert aux articles portant sur la spécificité de l’art médical, sa méthodologie, ses limites, sa déontologie. Sont en revanche exclues les propositions portant sur l’image traditionnelle de la philosophie comme médecine, ainsi que tous les emplois métaphoriques associés.

Les articles proposés à la revue (70 000 signes, espaces compris, au maximum, sans compter résumés et bibliographie) doivent être aux formats .doc ou .odt (et .pdf) dans une police unicode. Ils doivent être rédigés en français ou en anglais, accompagnés d’un résumé en français et en anglais, et envoyés par courrier électronique avant le 1er septembre 2025 à l’adresse suivante : revue.philosophieantique[at]gmail.com

Il vous est demandé de bien vouloir vous conformer aux instructions de présentation décrites sur la page suivante : https://journals.openedition.org/philosant/274

Les articles seront soumis à des experts anonymes pour évaluation.

vendredi 16 mai 2025

Postdoctorat histoire de la médecine

Post-doctorant-e à 80% en histoire de la médecine


Appel à candidatures


dans le cadre du projet Gender and clinical practice: an interdisciplinary exploration of clinical cases -PNR 83 Médecine, santé et genre- l’Institut Éthique Histoire Humanités, Université de Genève recherche, un·e post-doctorant-e à 80%


Cette personne de formation historienne, contemporanéiste (PhD requis en histoire de la médecine ou en histoire de la santé de genre et des sexualités) travaillera sur des archives d’hôpitaux (1950-2020) à partir d’une perspective intersectionnelle. Elle travaillera au sein de l’Institut d’éthique, histoire et humanités (iEH2) dans le cadre du projet PNR83, en étroite collaboration avec l’Unité santé et genre, à Unisanté (Université de Lausanne.)

Titre et compétences exigés

La personne qui candidate doit avoir acquis une solide formation en histoire de la médecine ou de la santé, une connaissance pratique des archives hospitalières, de la rigueur scientifique dans la méthodologie historique et des approches intersectionnelles.

La personne doit avoir rédigé une thèse de doctorat, avoir démontré une capacité à publier dans des systèmes internationaux d'évaluation par les pairs.

Le projet impliquant une collaboration avec d’autres institutions et équipes de recherche, il est important de posséder de bonnes aptitudes à la communication et une expérience de travail en équipe.

Une bonne connaissance du français et de l’anglais est nécessaire.

Entrée en fonction 01.09.2025 (CDD 3 ans).

Pour plus d’informations Post-doctorant-e - Fonds National (6350)

jeudi 15 mai 2025

Congrès conjoint de la SCHM-ACHN

Canadian Society for the History of Medicine / Sociéte canadienne d’histoire de la médecine - Canadian Association for the History of Nursing /Association canadienne pour l’histoire du nursing
 

Joint Conference | Colloque conjoint
 

May 31 – June 2 | 31 mai – 2 juin 2025
George Brown College, Toronto, Ontario


All Sessions take place in the Waterfront Building (WF) and The Waterfront Limberlost (WFL).
Toutes les séances se tiendront au Batiment Waterfront Building (WF) et au Waterfront Limberlost (WFL).


* Eligible for student prizes | Admissible aux prix étudiants 


Conference Organizing Committees | Comités organisateurs du colloque
Program Committee | Comité du programme: Peter L. Twohig, Geoffrey Hudson, Helen
Vandenberg
Local Arrangements | Organisation locale: Megan J. Davies, Charles Hayter, David
Hazzan, Lucy Vorobej
75th Anniversary Committee | Comité du 75e anniversaire: Annmarie Adams, Delia Gavrus,
Marie-Laurence Raby, Eric Story, Jaipreet Virdi, Lydia Wytenbroek


Friday May 30 | vendredi 31 mai

16:00 - 17:30 Toronto Medical History Discovery Walk | Promenade découverte
de l'histoire médicale de Toronto
Meeting point TBD.
Point de rendez-vous à déterminer.

18:00 - 20:00 CSHM Executive Meeting | Réunion de l’éxecutif de la SCHM
Wilson Centre, Toronto General Hospital


Saturday May 31 | samedi 31 mai

8:00 - 9:00 Breakfast and Welcome | Déjeuner et accueil
(WFL 333) Annmarie Adams, President, CSHM-SCHM
Peter L. Twohig, President, CAHN-ACHN
Breakfast and the plenary session have been graciously sponsored
by AMS Healthcare. CSHM and CAHN gratefully acknowledge AMS
Healthcare for their support and interest in this event.
Le déjeuner et la plénière sont gracieusement commandités par AMS
Healthcare. La SCHM et l’ACHN remercient chaleureusement AMS
Healthcare pour son soutien et son intérêt pour l’événement.
 

9:00 - 10:30 Plenary 1 | Plénière 1

(WFL 333) 75th Anniversary Round Table | Table ronde sur le 75e anniversaire
Welcome Remarks | Mot de bienvenue: Delia Gavrus, University of
Winnipeg
CSHM: Past, Present, Future
SCHM: Passé, présent, futur
Moderator | Modératrice: Eftihia Mihelakis, Université de Brandon
Panelists | Panélistes:
Helen Angus, AMS
Jacques Bernier, Université Laval
Jennifer Frasier, King's College London
Darrel Manitowabi, NOSM University
Kathryn McPherson, York University
Julien Prud'homme, Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières
Jaipreet Virdi, University of Delaware
10:30 - 10:45 Break | Pause
10:45 - 11:45 CSHM Annual General Meeting | Assemblée annuelle de la SCHM
(WFL 333)
11:45 - 12:45 Lunch | Dîner
12:45 - 14:15 Plenary 2 | Plénière 2

(WFL 333) Paterson Lecture | Conférence Paterson
Chair(e): Annmarie Adams
Roots and Shoots: A Digital Archaeology of the SCHM/CSHM
Racines et pousses : une archéologie numérique du SCHM/CSHM
Dr. Jacalyn Duffin, CM, MD, PhD, FRCPC, FRSC, FCAH
Professor Emerita, Queen’s University
Past President, CSHM-SCHM
We gratefully acknowledge funding provided by AMS Healthcare in
support of the Paterson Lecture.
Nous remercions chaleureusement AMS Healthcare d'avoir financé la
conférence Paterson.

14:15 - 15:45 Concurrent Sessions | 1A – 1C | Séances simultanées

1A (WF 710) Ideas of Caring | Penser la bienveillance
Chair(e): Susan Lamb
1.1.1 Power, Togetherness, and Relationships: A Historiography of Notions
of “Dependency” in Canadian Disability Histories
Shaelyn Ryan
1.1.2 L'hygiène mentale et le Québec de l'entre-deux-guerres : Aux origines
de l'éducation spécialisée
Hubert Larose-Dutil*
* Eligible for student prizes | Admissible aux prix étudiants 6
1.1.3 Caring through Coalition: Trans Family
Tegan Flowers*

1B (WFL 333) Indigenous People and Health and Medicine | La santé et la
médecine chez les peoples autochtones
Chair(e): Darrel Manitowabi
1.2.1 “The Great Majority of the People Died”: Pre-Colonial Diseases and the
Remaking of the Northern Coast Salish World
Colin Osmond
1.2.2 “We are not monkeys, we are not animals...”: Inuit, medical
experimentation, and the International Biological Programme
Maureen Lux
1.2.3 Iroquoian Cannibalism vs. Augustinian Corpse Medicine in New France,
c. 1649-1665
Abby Beckett*

1C (WF 610) Perspectives on Women’s Health | Perspectives sur la santé des
femmes
Chair(e): Lucy Vorobej
1.3.1 The transnational training of Chinese maternal health specialist Dr.
Yang Chongrui, between eugenics and public health
Mirela David
1.3.2 “We could help each other if we only knew more”: The women’s health
movement and pregnancy loss in the later twentieth century
Kirsten Leng
1.3.3 Sexual shyness: Experiences of vaginismus in Canada, 1960-2000s
Georgia Haire
15:45 - 16:00 Break | Pause
16:00 - 17:30 Concurrent Sessions | 2A – 2C | Séances simultanées

2A (WF 610) Occupational Health in 20th Century Canada | Santé au travail dans
le Canada du 20e siècle
Chair(e): Geoffrey Hudson
* Eligible for student prizes | Admissible aux prix étudiants 7
2.1.1 A Most Deleterious, Mercurial, and Protean Effect: Industrial Poisons,
Toxic Exposure, and the Treatment of Occupational Diseases in the
First World War Chemical Industry
Kyle Pritchard*
2.1.2 The Case of Jean Hardy: Sanatoria, Ward Aides, and Occupational
Health Risks in 1920
Courtney Mrazek
2.1.3 “As important as machinery”: Workers, unions, and the ‘third wave’ of
occupational health and safety, 1950 to 1970
Peter L. Twohig

2B (WFL 333) Getting Old: Historical Views, Current Issues | Vieillir : regards
historiques, questions actuelles
Chair(e): Julien Prud’homme
2.2.1 Les décennies 1930 et 1940 en Allemagne, un tournant pour la
gériatrie
Émilie Malenfant
2.2.2 Vieillir à l’hospice (Montréal 1890-1920)
Sophie Richelle

2C (WF 710) Expertise, Knowledge and Authority in Medicine and Psychiatry |
Expertise, savoir et autorité en médecine et en psychiatrie
Chair(e): Alex Myrick
2.3.1 Étudier la médecine dans l’Empire français : le cas de
Gnanavarayen (Pondichéry, 1855-1863)
Martin Robert
2.3.2 “Sooner or later, most of us get hooked”: The Role of Self-Help
Literature in Popularizing Psychiatric Thinking and Treatment in
America
Matthew McLaughlin*
2.3.3 A history of Pilo’s T3/T4 ratios in thyroid medical literature from 1990
to the present
Tania Smith and Julie N. Babione


Sunday June 1 | dimanche 1 juin
8:30 - 9:00 Refreshments | Rafraîchissements
9:00 - 10:30 Concurrent Sessions | 3A – 3C | Séances simultanées

3A (WF 610) Sources and Methods in Health Care History | Sources et
méthodes dans l’histoire des soins de santé
Chair(e): Erin Spinney
3.1.1 A Fool's Errand: How to (and Sometimes Not to) Gain Access to
Medical Records in Canada
Carly Naismith*
3.1.2 Finding the Roots, Discovering the Past, Celebrate the Present
Historical Articles in Ophthalmology Journals (19th-21st century)
Corinne Doria
3.1.3 Imaginative Archives for a Radical Nursing Future
Jane Hopkins Walsh

3B (WF 710) Writing Differently a Sensitive History of Psychiatry | Écrire
autrement une histoire sensible de la psychiatrie
Chair(e): Isabelle Perreault
3.2.1 Leur regard dans l’objectif : Toucher le réel par une lecture sensible
des dossiers patients
Marie LeBel
3.2.2 Mad Public History: Translating Asylum Case Files through Blended
Writing
Kira Smith
3.2.3 Une histoire sensible en format scénaristique
Marie-Claude Thifault

3C (WFL 333) Pandemic Public Health: Exploring Public Health Nursing
Influences in Canada Since 1918 | Santé publique en temps de
pandémie : l’influence des soins infirmiers en santé publique au
Canada depuis 1918

Round Table Participants | Participant.es à la table ronde: Geertje
Boschma, Sonya Grypma, Esyllt Jones, and Lydia Wytenbroek
10:30 - 10:45 Break | Pause
 

10:45 - 12:15 Plenary 3 | Plénière 3
(WFL 333) Hannah Lecture | Conférence Hannah
Chair(e): Peter L. Twohig
Race and Reparations in the History of Psychiatry
Kylie M. Smith, PhD
Director – Center for Healthcare History and Policy,
Nell Hodgson Woodruff School of Nursing and Associate Faculty,
Department of History, Emory University
We gratefully acknowledge funding provided by AMS Healthcare in
support of the Hannah Lecture.
Nous remercions chaleureusement AMS Healthcare d'avoir financé la
conférence Hannah.
 

12:15 - 13:00 Lunch | Dîner
 

13:00 - 14:30 Concurrent Sessions | 4A – 4C | Séances simultanées

4A (WFL 333) Bridging the Gap: Making Medical History Accessible to the
General Public | Combler l’écart : rendre l’histoire de la médecine
accessible au grand public
Round Table Participants | Participant.es à la table ronde: John Dirks,
Charles Hayter, Alison Li, and Christopher Rutty

4B (WF 710) Vulnerabilities and Caring in Contemporary Health Care |
Vulnérabilité et bienveillance dans les soins de santé actuels
Chair(e): Courtney Mrazek
4.2.1 Nightgowns: The Materiality of Institutional Violence
Katharine Viscardis
4.2.2 Mental Health Vulnerability, Medical Assistance in Dying Uptake, and
the Shifting Landscape of End-of-Life Care for Mental Disorders in
British Columbia
* Eligible for student prizes | Admissible aux prix étudiants 10
Tyler Paetkau*
4.2.3 Exploring End-of-Career Physician Memories of the Humanities in
Medical Education
Karly Gunson*, Lucy Vorobej, and Cynthia Whitehead

4C (WF 610) Canada’s Health Care Workforce | Effectifs en santé au Canada
Chair(e): Sioban Nelson
4.3.1 Shifting Care: The Evolving Roles of Caregivers in BC's Mental Health
System
Michelle Danda
4.3.2 “Operation Recall”: The Federation of Medical Women of Canada’s
Contribution to Solving Canada’s Medical Manpower Shortage of the
1960’s
Christina Lack*
4.3.3 Applying feminist theory to the past, present, and future of the
Canadian health care workforce
Adrienne Gulliver*
 

14:30 - 14:45 Break | Pause
 

14:45 - 16:45 Concurrent Sessions | 5A – 5C | Séances simultanées

5A (WFL 333) Reel Reflections: Digital Nursing History Storytelling as an
Antiracism Intervention in Nursing | Réflexions filmiques – Le récit
numérique de l’histoire des soins infirmiers : une intervention
antiraciste en soins infirmiers
Round Table Participants | Participant.es à la table ronde: Lydia
Wytenbroek, Kyra Philbert, Shams Al-Anzi*, Cates Bayabay, Ismalia De
Sousa*, Atussa Shabahang*, and Kerry Marshall*
 

5B (WF 610) Psychiatry | Psychiatrie
Chair(e): Erika Dyck
5.2.1 An Awareness of Silence: A Case Study Exploring Family and
Institutional Dynamics at the London Asylum for the Insane, 1911-1918
Paige Lianne Murray
* Eligible for student prizes | Admissible aux prix étudiants 11
5.2.2 Wasted Lives: The Canadian National Committee for Mental Hygiene
and the Calculation of the Value of Life, 1918-1958
Thomas Foth
5.2.3 The Many Lives of Meyerian Psychiatry: Understanding Adolf Meyer’s
Influence Through the Diaspora of Johns Hopkins Psychiatrists
Alex Myrick*
5.2.4 La Stirling County Study et ses réplications : un regard historique sur
l’ambition de faire science en épidémiologie psychiatrique en Nouvelle
Écosse et au Québec
Emmanuel Delille
 

5C (WF 710) Disease | Maladie
Chair(e): Charles Hayter
5.3.1 The ‘No Nose Club’: Exploring Quackish Consumption of Pox Care in
Long Eighteenth- Century England
Sasha Jones*
5.3.2 “I’m not sure it was worth it”: Unpacking silver linings discourse in
Canada’s thalidomide scandal
Madeline Burghardt
5.3.3 Juicy Knowledge: The Dubin Inquiry and Canada's Not-So-Secret
Steroid Underworld
Aidan Hughes
5.3.4 “Most surprising and bewildering”: Encephalitis lethargica and
the social construction of post-infectious illness, 1916-1935
Genya Kleiner
 

16:45 - 18:00 Book Launch Event | Lancement de livres
(WFL 333), George Brown College
Book giveaway for graduate students | Tirage de livres pour les
étudiants.es aux cycles supérieurs: Eric Story and Jaipreet Virdi
Thank you to the Toronto Medical Historical Club for their generous
financial support of this year’s strawberries and champagne book
launch.

Merci au Toronto Medical Historical Club pour son généreux soutien
financier au lancement des livres « Fraises et champagne » de cette
année.
 

18:30 onward CSHM Banquet | Banquet de la SCHM
Hart House, University of Toronto


Monday June 2 | lundi 2 juin
8:30 - 9:00 Refreshments | Rafraîchissements
 

9:30 - 10:30 Concurrent Sessions | 6A – 6C | Séances simultanées

6A (WFL 608) Catching Your Breath | Reprendre son souffle
Chair(e): Christopher Rutty
6.1.1 The Tuberculosis Crisis of 1916
Eric Story
6.1.3 The Persistent Innocence of Domestic Allergens
Erica Vinson*
6B (WFL 532) Health and Medicine during the First World War | Santé et
médecine pendant la Première Guerre mondiale
Chair(e): TBA
6.2.1 The Unsung among the Unknown – The Canadian Nurses of the
Chicago Medical Unit: 1915-1916
Ross Hebb
6.2.2 The Female First Contingent: Canada’s First 100 Great War Nurses
Andrea McKenzie
6.2.3 The Shell-Shocked Equine, 1914 – 1918
Emily Oakes*
 

6C (WFL 532) Transnational Connections | Liens transnationaux
Chair(e): Corinne Doria

7.2.1 Naturalizing Conquest in Latin America: Jehan Albert Vellard,
Paraguyan Fieldwork, and the Columbian Exchange
Sebastián Gil-Riaño
7.2.2 Garapuvu-Ayahuasca: The Cold War, Armed Colonization, and Rooting
the ‘Psychedelic Renaissance’ in Sambaqui
Taylor Elizabeth Dysart
7.2.3 “The only good thing about being a cod fisherman was the medical
care”: Health, Fascism, and the Portuguese Cod Fishery on the Grand
Banks, 1930-1974
John Matchim
 

10:30 - 10:45 Break | Pause
 

10:45 - 12:15 Concurrent Sessions | 7A – 7C | Séances simultanées
 

7A (WFL 608) Surgery | Chirurgie
Chair(e): Peter Kopplin
7.1.1 Early Byzantine Surgical Innovations: Insights from the Pragmateia of
Paul of Aegina
Edward Hoptioncann*
7.1.2 Sterling Bunnell and the Emergence of Hand Surgery
Steve McCabe
7.1.3 Physicians and Facial Reconstruction of Children with Down Syndrome
Martha Walls
 

7B (WF 518) Medical History Microhistories | Microhistoires de l’histoire
médicale
Chair(e): Dan Malleck
6.3.1 “Mr O’Brien Is Unwell Again, As He Was Before”: Care, Disability, and
Intimacy in Mary O’Brien’s Journal
Gabrielle McLaren*
6.3.2 An Accidental Settler Micro-history: the SS Asia & Manitoulin Island,
1882-2025
Geoffrey Hudson
* Eligible for student prizes | Admissible aux prix étudiants 14
6.3.3 Promotion of an Unorthodox Theory in the Market of Medical Ideas
in Nineteenth Century Britain: What the Advertisements and Reviews
of E. W. Lane’s Works on ‘Hygienic Medicine’ Tell Us
Min Bae
 

7C (WF 518) Global Perspectives on 20th Century Nursing | Perspectives
mondiales sur les soins infirmiers du 20e siècle
Chair(e): Geertje Boschma
7.3.1 The tale of the abandoned trunk: Rockefeller Foundation nursing
fellows and the politics of a global vision for American nursing in the
mid twentieth century
Sioban Nelson
7.3.2 Masculinity and Professional Discourse in Nursing the Case of
Germany ca. 1960 – 1980
Christoph Schwamm
7.3.3 Laboring into the Sunset: Filipino Nurses, Welfare Capitalism, and
the Hawaiian Sugar Industry, 1906–1935
Reynaldo Capucao
 

12:20 - 12:30 Student Prizes | Prix étudiants
(WF 518) Megan J. Davies, Segall Prize Committee
Lydia Wytenbroek, Vicky Bach Memorial Prize Committee
Georgina Feldberg Memorial Student Award
Closing Remarks | Not de clôture
* Eligible for student prizes | Admissible aux prix étudiants 15

mercredi 14 mai 2025

La Société fédérale suisse de gymnastique

Faire nation en faisant de la gymnastique. Une histoire culturelle et sociale de la Société fédérale de gymnastique (1853-1914) 

 

Gil Mayencourt



Editeur Editions Alphil

Collection Sport et Sciences Sociales 

Date de publication 17 avril 2025

Dans son texte " La psychologie du peuple suisse " (1934), l'intellectuel de droite et chantre de l'helvétisme Gonzague de Reynold postule que " la politique est l'occupation, le jeu, le sport favori des Suisses, avec le tir et l'alpinisme ". Au-delà de la métaphore, quand, comment, et par qui les vases communicants entre sport et politique sont-ils établis en Suisse? Quelles dynamiques historiques renforcent, dans les esprits commedans les institutions, l'idée qu'il existe un " sport national helvétique " renvoyant désormais tant à l'expression du langage commun qu'à une doctrine plus identitaire?Basé sur de nombreux fonds inédits d'archives, ce livre revient sur les premiers pas de l'État fédéral helvétique de 1848 à travers un objet d'étude se voulant tout en muscles, en rigueur patriotique et en virilité: la gymnastique associative telle qu'elle se développe sur le territoire fracturé de la jeune nation suisse sous l'égide de la Société fédérale de gymnastique (SFG). Suivant les traces des gymnastes des villes aux villages, des grandes fêtes aux rassemblements locaux, de la Suisse à l'Europe en passant par la côte Est des États-Unis, il s'agit de montrer comment la SFG parvientà tisser des liens très forts avec la Confédération, cela tout en fabriquant le mythe d'une gymnastique " typiquement suisse " aux échos de plus en plus conservateurs.De l'histoire culturelle et sociale à celles des associations, du fait politique et du genre, le développement de la SFG jusqu'à la Première Guerre mondiale en dit long sur la complexité de l'avènement de la Suisse moderne.

mardi 13 mai 2025

Handicap et sainteté au Moyen Âge

Disability and Sanctity in the Middle Ages
 

Stephanie Grace-Petinos, Leah Parker, Alicia Spencer-Hall (Editors)


Publisher ‏ : ‎ Amsterdam University Press (April 28, 2025)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 308 pages
ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 9463724338
ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-9463724333


This volume significantly expands current understandings of both disability and sanctity in the Middle Ages. Across the collection, heterogeneous constructions, and experiences, of disability and holiness are excavated. Analyses span the sixth to the fifteenth century, with discussion of holy men and holy women, Western Christian and Buddhist traditions, hagiographic texts, images, and artefacts. Each chapter underscores that disability and sanctity co-exist with a vast array of connotations, not just fully positive or fully negative, but also every inflection in between. The collection is a powerful rebuttal to the notion of the integral relationship of disability―medieval and otherwise―with sin, stigma, and shame. So doing, it recentres medieval disability history as a lived history that merits exploration and celebration. In this way, the volume serves to reclaim sanctity in disability histories as a means to affirm the possibility of radical disability futures.

lundi 12 mai 2025

L'alcool et l'imaginaire politique dans l'Australie coloniale

Drink and Democracy. Alcohol and the Political Imaginary in Colonial Australia
 

Matthew Allen

McGill-Queen’s University Press
2025

The nineteenth-century spread of democracy in Britain and its colonies coincided with an increase in alcohol consumption and in celebratory public dinners with rounds of toasts. British colonists raised their glasses to salute the Crown in rituals that asserted fraternal equality and political authority. Yet these ceremonies were reserved for gentlemen, leaving others – notably women and Indigenous people – on the political margins.

Drink and Democracy traces the development of democratic ideas in New South Wales through the history of public drinking and temperance. As the colony transformed from a convict autocracy to a liberal democracy, Matthew Allen argues, public drinking practices shaped the character of the emerging political order. The ritual of toasting was a symbolic display of restraint – drunkenness without loss of self-control – that embodied the claim to citizenship of white male settlers. Yet the performative sobriety of the temperance movement was also democratic, a display of respectability that politicized its supporters around a rival vision of responsible citizenship. Drink was a way to police the limits of the political realm. The stigma of female drunkenness worked to exclude women from the public sphere, while perceptions of heavy drinking among Aboriginal people cast them as lacking self-control and hence unworthy of political rights.

Drink and Democracy reveals that long before the introduction of the franchise, colonists in Australia imagined themselves as citizens. Yet even as democracy expanded, drink marked its limits.

 

dimanche 11 mai 2025

Écologies du contrôle des maladies

Ecologies of Disease Control: Spaces of Health Security in Historical Perspective


Carolin Mezes, Sven Opitz, Andrea Wiegeshoff (Editors)


Publisher ‏ : ‎ University of Pittsburgh Press (April 29, 2025)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 312 pages
ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0822948486
ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0822948483


Ecologies of Disease Control explores the relationship between ecological conceptions of epidemics and forms of infectious disease control. Bringing historical, sociological, anthropological, and geographical case studies from the late eighteenth century to the present into dialogue, contributors unearth a multiplicity of spatial configurations in governing epidemics, putting contemporary health security regimes into historical perspective. Emerging infectious diseases—HIV/AIDS, malaria, tuberculosis, influenza, SARS, West Nile virus, Marburg virus—and the threat they posed to national security and geopolitical order have incentivized the development of global health security initiatives since the 1990s. Yet, as this volume reveals, various practices of disease control have made epidemic outbreaks a matter of ecological management as well. These practices involve ecosystems and infrastructures, more-than-human mobilities, disease landscapes, elemental atmospheres, metabolic entanglements, and real-time information systems. As scholars in the humanities and social sciences begin to adopt ecology as an analytical framework, this volume offers a critical perspective on the ecological concepts that inform historical and current practices of health security.

samedi 10 mai 2025

Les pionniers de la microchirurgie

Les pionniers de la microchirurgie

Michel A. Germain

 

L'Harmattan

2025


La microchirurgie clinique a débuté avec deux hommes séparés par toute la largeur de l’océan Pacifique : Harry Buncke en Californie et Bernard O’Brien en Australie. Il existe cinq pays pionniers en microchirurgie : les États-Unis, l’Australie, le Japon, la Chine et la France.
Deux chirurgiens, Alexis Carrel en 1906, puis Jacobson en 1946, ont développé les microsutures vasculaires et les microtransplants. Depuis 1970, plusieurs équipes dans le monde se sont intéressées à la microchirurgie et ont contribué à son développement.
Aujourd’hui, toutes les spécialités médicales utilisent la microchirurgie. Elle est incontournable dans les cas difficiles ou insolubles. Voici son histoire, à travers celle de ces chirurgiens précurseurs.
Guérir les malades, les aider à se reconstruire d’une vie blessée par la maladie, ce livre se veut un message d’espoir.

vendredi 9 mai 2025

Sciences et allégorie

“As stiffe twin compasses”: Allegory and Sciences, 1300-1700

Call for papers

Location: Warburg Institute, University of London

Conference date: 24 October 2025

Submission deadline: 15 June 2025

Organiser: Sergei Zotov (Frances Yates Fellow, Warburg Institute)

Keynote: Sachiko Kusukawa (Cambridge, Trinity College) on how emblematic worldview shaped early modern scientific thought and representation, from Vesalius and Brahe to Gessner, Camerarius Jr, and Boyle.

Zodiac Man as medical microcosm, Christ’s limbs symbolising chapters of the Bible, alchemical androgyne embodying sulphur and mercury, four demons representing cardinal winds, compass legs as lovers, the labyrinth as a path to divine truth — there are many examples illustrating how pre-modern sciences employed allegory to visualise and organise knowledge.

This conference investigates the multifaceted roles of allegory within scientific and intellectual traditions from the Late Middle Ages to the Early Modern period in Europe. Focusing on a wide range of disciplines — including anatomy, astrology, alchemy, botanics, magic, medicine, mathematics, zoology, and theology — we will examine how allegorical modes of representation functioned not only as a tool for conveying abstract ideas and encoding practical knowledge but also as a means of reinforcing the authority of a discipline.

Allegory helped shaping the conceptual frameworks through which knowledge was produced, transmitted, and legitimised in various sciences. By examining allegorical imagery and textual strategies, we will consider how scholars adapted this rhetorical or iconographical device to communicate across different audiences, from learned circles to broader publics. Through comparative analysis, we aim to uncover common patterns, disciplinary crossovers, and shifts in the use of allegory over time.

Special attention will be given to the interplay between text and image, the transmission of allegorical motifs, and the role of print and manuscript cultures in shaping allegorical traditions of sciences. Ultimately, the conference seeks to provide new insights into the intellectual history of allegory and its enduring impact on the representation of knowledge. By bringing together scholars from across fields and regions, we seek to advance a deeper understanding of allegory’s place in the intellectual history of premodern Europe.

Suggested topics include, but are not limited to: Epistemic Functions: How did allegory serve to encode and transmit scientific knowledge? What forms of reasoning did it support or obscure?
Cross-Disciplinary Currents: How was allegory used to mediate between different branches of knowledge — for instance, theology and natural philosophy, or magic and medicine?
Audiences and Authority: How did allegorical modes reinforce the authority of certain disciplines or figures? How were allegories tailored for elite, learned, or popular audiences?
Transmission and Variation: How did allegorical forms travel across manuscripts, printed books, and other media? What kinds of variation do we see in their visual or textual expression over time?


We encourage proposals from scholars working in history of science, intellectual history, art history, manuscript and book studies, and adjacent fields. PhD students and ECRs are also welcome to apply.

Please send proposals (max 300 words) and a short biographical note (max 150 words) to sergei.zotov@sas.ac.uk by 15 June 2025.

More information: https://warburg.sas.ac.uk/events/CFP--allegory-and-sciences-1300-1700

jeudi 8 mai 2025

La relation médecin-patient et le roman français du XIXe siècle

The Doctor-Patient Relationship and the Nineteenth-Century French Novel

Sarah Jones

 
Publisher ‏ : ‎ Oxford University Press (April 30, 2025)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 192 pages
ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0198893795
ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0198893790 


The Doctor-Patient Relationship and the Nineteenth-Century French Novel analyses the representation of the doctor-patient relationship in the nineteenth-century French novel, notably in the words of Balzac, Sand, Stendhal, and Zola. It argues that the doctor-patient relationship is represented in these novels as a site of interpersonal negotiation wherein the meaning of medical authority, embodied experience, and the spectre of illness and pain are mediated and reimagined. This book highlights how the doctor-patient relationship is often idealized by the novel, wherein the doctor is characterised as a both dedicated to his patients and local community, as well as being a God-like master of life, death, and medical knowledge. The volume suggests that the doctor-patient encounter is often depicted as a separate, although inherently related, concept that undermines this idealisation of medical relationships. The doctor-patient encounter thereby questions the hegemonic power of medical practitioners over their patients by pointing towards how novels depict patients as resisting and even manipulating their doctors. The book identifies and explores other important themes within the doctor-patient relationship such as the medical gaze (regard médical), power relationships, and the use of embodied metaphor. In particular, the book highlights how the doctor-patient relationship is often a confrontation between scientific knowledge and the experience of gender and disability. The book's conceptual framework is derived from the critical medical humanities, and the volume revitalises and reframes the doctor-patient relationship by considering the intrinsic slippage between idealised relationships and critical encounters. The book uses close readings of its corpus to understand how medical practice is debated and undermined concurrently with its idealisation. It places literary works within a new historical context by reading across novels within their medical and scientific context, and situates them for the first time in the intellectual context of the critical medical humanities. The book points forward to how nineteenth-century French novels can reform how the critical medical humanities views the medical relationship, and the potential impact on real-world patients.

mercredi 7 mai 2025

Les cartographes du cerveau

The Mind Mappers. Friendship, Betrayal and the Obsessive Quest to Chart the Brain 

Eric Andrew-Gee

Penguin Random House
May 2025


In the early 1920s, when neurosurgery was more likely to be a death sentence than a cure, two men revolutionized the study of the brain: Wilder Penfield and William Cone. Drawn together by their shared fascination with the “undiscovered country” inside our heads, the surgeons formed a partnership and within ten years established the Montreal Neurological Institute in a Gothic stone hospital on the slope of a mountain. The Neuro soon became the world’s leading centre for neurological study, attracting men and women from across the globe to a booming mid-century city.

But their success came at the cost of their friendship.

While Cone spent long hours at patients’ bedsides and in the blood-spattered operating room, Penfield pursued the loftier goal of discovering the seat of consciousness. The Chief, as he was known, went on to develop the Montreal procedure for treating epilepsy, which helped identify the source of speech, executive function and memory in narrow slivers of grey matter—achievements that illuminated the relationship between mind and body, made possible by Cone’s anonymous work behind the scenes. Over time, their relationship became fraught with personal and professional hurts—and suddenly ended when Cone was found dead in his office at the age of sixty-two.

In this compelling dual biography, Globe and Mail journalist Eric Andrew-Gee weaves together the rich history of The Neuro with that of Penfield and Cone to reveal the untold story of one of the birthplaces of neuroscience. In doing so, he breathes new life into a familiar hero and revives the tragic, forgotten story of his partner, writing Dr. William Cone back into the historical record at last.

mardi 6 mai 2025

Groupe de travail international sur les modèles et moulages en cire médicale

International Working Group on Medical Wax Models & Moulages


Call for Papers



Meeting 9–10 September, 2025 at the Deutsches Medizinhistorisches Museum, Ingolstadt, Germany

Invitation and call for papers

Medical wax model collections have been the subject of renewed scientific interest since the turn of the millennium. As part of the material turn, scholars in history and cultural studies increasingly study historical objects in museums and university collections. Wax moulages in particular, with their specific characteristics, have attracted attention from medical professionals and historians alike.

A German-speaking Moulages Working Group was formed in Berlin in 2013, following a major international conference in Dresden 2009. Ten years later, at a meeting in Zurich in 2023, the circle of participants was expanded to represent collections from all over the world. As an international working group, we now take the next step and join the newly founded International Association of Medical Museums and Collections (IAMMC) as the International Working Group on Medical Wax Models (IWWM).

We invite you to join us to exchange ideas and network further in Ingolstadt before the start of the first biennial IAMMC meeting 10–13 September. Historical researchers, medical practitioners, as well as custodians, conservators, and curators are all welcome to join the meeting. We aim to address a wide range of questions and concerns relating to medical wax models. Papers may address topics such as
  • historical knowledge production and mediation with wax models and moulages
  • conservation and restoration practices
  • ongoing research or exhibition projects
  • using medical wax models in teaching, public outreach, or museum education work
  • ethical aspects of displaying moulages and wax models in exhibitions and publications

Please submit paper proposals by 31 May to info@moulagen.ch

Practical information
  • the abstract should be no longer than 1 DIN A4, including a short CV and details of your institution
  • presentation formats – state which one you prefer: (1) a 20-minute paper, or (2) a 5-minute presentation of a collection, museum, exhibition, or network activities
  • the conference language is English and the meeting can only be attended in person
  • the meeting convenes 9 September 2 pm to 6 pm, and 10 September 9.30 am to 1 pm
  • there will be a small conference fee to cover coffee and snacks
  • IWWM web site (under construction): https://www.moulagen.uzh.ch/en/IWWM
  • the IAMMC meeting 10-13 Sep.: https://www.dmm-ingolstadt.de/2025-iammc-conference.html

We look forward to seeing you in Ingolstadt!

The organizing committee: Michael Geiges, Sabina Carraro, Eloïse Quétel, Henrik Essler, Eva Åhrén

Contact Information

The organizing committee: Michael Geiges, Sabina Carraro, Eloïse Quétel, Henrik Essler, Eva Åhrén

IWWM web site (under construction): https://www.moulagen.uzh.ch/en/IWWM

Contact Email
info@moulagen.ch

URL
https://www.moulagen.uzh.ch/en/IWWM

lundi 5 mai 2025

Genre, acteurs et actrices des "savoirs psy"

Genre, acteurs et actrices des "savoirs psy"

Journée d'études  

RomandPsy & Séminaire Masculinités, santé, genre. Une collaboration IHM CHUV-UNIL et Institut de psychologie UNIL

Vendredi 23 mai 2025, 10h-16h45, Salle 2218, Géopolis, UNIL


Intervenant.es : Camille Jaccard, IP-UNIL, Marie Leyder, IEH2-UNIGE, Antoine Marquis, TEMOS Angers, Florent Serina, IHM et TEMOS Angers et Nina Studer, IEH2-UNIGE


Modération par Amélie Puche, IHM, Michaël Roelli, IP-UNIL


À 17h (salle à confirmer), projection du documentaire Outsider. Freud. suivie d’une table ronde avec le réalisateur Yair Qedar, ainsi que Catherine Krahenbuhl Valentini, Elena Vaquero et Christfried Tögel (en anglais)
Modération par Aude Fauvel, IHM, Rémy Amouroux, IP


Inscription pour la projection à l’adresse : alix.vogel@unil.ch

dimanche 4 mai 2025

Corps et soins dans l'épreuve de la guerre

Body and care in the ordeal of war. A socio-historical perspective on East-Central and East-Southern Europe in the 20th-21st centuries.




Call for Papers


Date
November 12, 2025 - November 14, 2025

Location
Czechia


CEFRES, Prague, November 12-14, 2025

In contrast to perceptions of the war phenomenon as a situation of exception and, as such, a shocking and obscure object, apprehending the war from an ordinary perspective and through a socio-historical approach is a fruitful entry point for understanding the functioning of societies, the solidity of social ties that sustain them, the solicitude they manifest for their populations exposed to the outbreaks of violence, and, in particular, for the violated, displaced, exhausted, sick, wounded, mutilated, or people experiencing disabilities. The relationship between wars, their bodily/mental impacts and care has been studied extensively in the history of medicine, welfare policies, veterans, and disability, but mainly from the perspective of Western European or North American societies. Research highlights a constant concern of health professionals, supported by charity and voluntary organizations for bodies affected by violence from WWI, not to mention earlier conflicts, to international military operations in Iraq or Afghanistan. Those efforts range from providing training for soldiers and civilians, professionals, and ordinary actors (e.g., fighters, civilian defense volunteers), as well as the deployment of (para)medical logistics and emergency first aid near the front line, to the supply of medicines, in-hospital care, development of new care infrastructure and body-repairing techniques.

Analyses focusing on care for bodies impacted by wartime violence in East-Central and East-Southern European societies remain scarce to date. Existing research points to difficulties in developing an adequate and comprehensive medical response because of the scale of bodily and mental injuries on the Eastern front(s), as well as to a long-standing tendency for social disregard for incapacitated veterans and civilians who are marginalized in redistributive schemes, reduced to poor-quality prosthetic services, or even to begging on the streets as in the USSR. This draws, in essence, a response schematically opposed to that of Western societies.

The aim of this conference is to fill an important gap in our understanding of the relation between war, violence-affected and thus fragilized bodies and care in East-Central and East-Southern European societies in a long-term perspective, that of the armed conflicts of the 20th-21st centuries. East-Central and East-Southern European societies have historically been disrupted by the brutality of war violence and confronted with the short- and long-term challenges of managing its consequences, evolving in a context of collapsing empires and emerging new states in the borderlands, of constantly redrawn borders and changing political regimes, but also engaged in an intense circulation of ideas, norms, models, people, and practices. Therefore, East-Central and East-Southern European societies constitute a laboratory for social innovation in caring for violence-affected bodies on various scales (community, associative, humanitarian, municipal, state, national, international). The conference’s objective is also to shed light on multiple entanglements between body and care in the ordeal of war through a resolutely interdisciplinary dialogue between historians and sociologists, but also open to other social scientists, and through both “top-down” and “bottom-up” approaches, or multi-scalar analysis.

We define care broadly, both as curative treatment (cure) aimed at recovering and, by extension, a system of organized provision of medical care (healthcare), and as social relations, attitudes, policies, and practices of assistance to others, that are exercised in a variety of settings (charity, voluntary help, family, paid work…) and rely, at the level of social care, on interventions by public authorities, communities and private actors in support of people considered as vulnerable (welfare). In the context of armed conflicts, care also involves a significant militarization of actors (patients, care-providers) and the renegotiation of what taking care and providing care means in terms of rights, expectations, and practices.

Our conference focuses on armed conflicts in East-Central and East-Southern Europe from the early 20th century Balkan wars to the current Russian-Ukrainian War, with a particular interest in both world wars, wars of independence and civil wars. A fine-grained analysis of differences between territories of violence and care within East-Central and East-Southern Europe, including case studies on local structures and communities, comparison between several geographical spaces, transnational perspective on actors and organizations, would certainly be appreciated. Also, paying attention to the major shifts in warfare, care, humanitarian principles, and legal conventions throughout the 20th -21stcenturies would be an asset for the discussion, as well as reflexivity on available material, such as archives, interviews, or field work.

Among the topics we would offer for consideration are:

Body and mental health. What are the main impacts of military strategies (bombing, blockades, occupation), technologies (equipment, transportation, housing), weapons or ammunition, and protective gear (bulletproof vests, helmets, masks) on bodies and mental health? How are these bodily impacts (diseases, wounds, mutilations, disabilities) medically treated and socially cared for during the war and in its aftermath? How are psychological traumas and mental disorders, which have long been marginalized and now statistically dominate the spectrum of illnesses observed in many wartime contexts, assessed, and managed? What correlations can be observed between the evolution of the warfare means and the injuries sustained, from the mass shelling of the First World War to the intensive use of drones and rockets in the Russian-Ukrainian war? What physical and mental after-affects do the lived experiences of wartime violence leave in the long term? How do they impact individual and collective trajectories of those concerned? Finally, how are dead bodies handled?

Hygiene, nutrition, epidemics. By bringing extremely precarious living conditions, the war results in major health problems for both the military and civilians and in spreading of water, sanitation, and hygiene- associated diseases. What kinds of solutions does the war favor at the political, military, scientific, medical, industrial level in face of epidemic outbreaks and hygienic vulnerability? What is the role of technological innovation, sanitation programs and education in sanitary policies?

Healthcare institutions and actors. How does the war affect healthcare institutions and actors, both military and civilian? How do institutions and actors respond to wartime emergencies: huge contingents of sick, violated, wounded, mutilated bodies; propagation of epidemics; threats to the most vulnerable categories (children, the elderly, people with disability)? How do they cope with the lack of medicines and specialized care facilities? How does war transform the geography, chains, and standards of healthcare, as well as the gestures and practices of medical practitioners? What therapeutic, surgical, and prosthetic innovations does the war encourage? What impact does it produce on (para)medical training? How does it redefine the boundaries of professionalism (versus amateurism/volunteering), and redraw the profile of actors admitted to step in to provide medical assistance? Finally, how does the war and its sanitary shortfalls contribute to the reconstruction of healthcare institutions and medical standards in the aftermath of war?

Care provision, regimes, and infrastructure. Emergency, in particular the need to enable wounded and sick to fight again in context of mass casualties, is one of the main factors structuring the provision of care or its denial (through triage) in wartime. As a result, the war induces a radical (re)definition of care priorities, hierarchies and vulnerabilities. Whom, between soldiers and civilians, are to be protected and cared for first? What other categories (children, women, elderly people, civilians with disability, displaced persons, veterans) are to be considered as vulnerable, deserving or worthy, and prioritized? How do gender, ethnicity, age, nature of injury or disability, civilian/military, national/allied/foreign, or enemy status underpin the categorization of populations during the war and regulate the access to care, including some while excluding others? What inequalities or medical discrimination in access to care do these shifting priorities generate? Care regimes with their principles of social division of labor also undergo a radical reconfiguration through the war. How are caring responsibilities redistributed between States, civil society organizations (volunteers, Churches, private charity), international actors (relief foundations humanitarian organizations), health (non)professionals, family members, men and women during the war and in its aftermath? Finally, how do care infrastructure cope with destruction, logistical difficulties, shortages of pharmaceutical products, medical equipment and personnel, remoteness from patients, etc.? How are they re-organized in the aftermath of the war?

Material culture of care. Material objects involved in care provision (drugs, prosthesis, (para)medical supplies) are also of particular interest for us. What are the dynamics of production, usage, consumption, and development of those objects over the 20th-21st centuries’ wars and their aftermath? Which behaviors, professional skills and norms, solidarity networks, communities of practitioners and patients, did they give rise to? How do markets and publics actors trade or regulate the distribution and access to medical or welfare artefacts in times of war or after conflicts are over? How does the availability of medical and welfare commodities impact the geography of care in times of war, defining maybe spaces of relative abondance and territories of extreme scarcity?

Mixed economies of welfare. Destructive as they are, wars also produce a reconfiguring effect on social and medical care. Indeed, by multiplying needs for assistance and producing putative categories of the vulnerable (children, widows, displaced persons, sick, wounded, disabled), they favor the emergence of a myriad of welfare structures based on national/international, but also occupational, gender, religious forms of solidarity, which contribute “from below”, to the fabric of welfare. How preoccupations for the vulnerable are co-constructed “from below” and “from above”, at the crossroad of communities’ agency and public policies? Who are the main actors of solidarities in wartime mixed economies of welfare? What caring roles and functions do assume fluctuating central States, municipalities, private charity, associations, families and family networks, parishes, trade unions, religious associations, neighborhoods, etc.? How are social innovations in the field of wartime relief and solidarity reinvested and appropriated in the aftermath of wars?

Circulations. Our interest is also to explain the relationship between war, body and care from the standpoint of the circulation of norms, models, knowledge, people, between East-Central, East-Southern and West European or North American societies, or even imperial and colonial territories, but also within different arenas (local, regional, national, transnational) and among a variety of actors engaged (States, civil society organizations, healthcare professionals, etc…). Who and what circulates? What are the main directions and routes of circulation? How are circulating knowledge, norms and models locally reappropriated? What is the impact of the war-induced specific migration of care workers, particularly of women? How does “care drain” impact countries of origin of migrating care workers and hosting societies? And how do spheres of influence and intervention in care policies evolve throughout time?

Agency and rights of the cared-for. Agency of the cared-for and their involvement in actions that are likely to improve their condition and influence social choices need to be fully integrated to the discussion. Despite their situational or permanent vulnerabilities, patients or recipients may resist a deteriorated care relationship or curative insistence, criticize dedicated care regimes, policies, and practices, mobilize collectively to claim their rights. How and in which form —lobbying activities, volunteering in self-help networks, investment in the role of experienced “broker” in peer-groups or on social networks — do the cared-for exercise their agency? How do they individually and collectively defend their rights? What legitimation arguments do they mobilize and what claims do they put forward in their appeal to the public? How do they relate to and reaffirm their bodily sacrifice? And, finally, to what extent does care crystallize resistance to control from above, and struggle for autonomy?

We welcome submissions (max. 700 words) by all social scientists. Young researchers’ submissions are explicitly welcome; the proposals will be judged on their scientific quality, without regard for the career stage or status of their authors. The conference will include a workshop specifically dedicated to an interdisciplinary discussion of sources and methods; submissions should point to these as well.

All applications should be sent by May 5, 2025 to body.care.war@gmail.com

The language of the conference will be English. Applications can be sent in most European languages, including Ukrainian, and fluency in English is not required to take part, although correct understanding is welcome. Organizers can help during the conference participants with weak English skills but strong scientific proposals.

The conference will take place on 12-14 November 2025 in Prague. The organizers will try to cover all the costs for participants who are not funded by their home institutions. Costs for all Ukrainian participants (currently in Ukraine or displaced) will be entirely covered.

This conference is part of activities conducted by the “War and Society in Central and Eastern Europe (20th-21st centuries)” Research Alliance (EURETES, EHESS-MESR) that brings together CERCEC-EHESS, Charles University in Prague and Lviv Center of Urban History. It is hosted and supported by CEFRES, French Research Center in Humanities and Social Sciences in Prague (CNRS-MEAE).

Scientific committee:

Thomas Chopard (EHESS/CEFRES)

Laura Lee Downs (European University Institute)

Mark Edele (U of Melbourne)

Dominika Gruziel (European University Institute)

Ota Кonrád (Institute of International Studies, Faculty of Social Sciences, Charles University)

Valeria Korablyova, (Institute of International Studies, Faculty of Social Sciences, Charles University/CEFRES)

Morgane Labbé (EHESS)

Paul Lenormand (U Paris Nanterre/ISP)

Jean-Paul Newman (Maynooth University)

Sarah D. Phillips (U of Indiana)

Václav Šmidrkal (Institute of International Studies, Faculty of Social Sciences, Charles University)

Ioulia Shukan (EHESS)

Iryna Sklokina (Center for Urban History, Lviv)

Alexandre Sumpf (U of Strasbourg)

Oksana Vynnyk (Maynooth University)

Hanna Zaremba-Kosovych (Institute of Ethnology, Academy of sciences of Ukraine)

Contact Email
body.care.war@gmail.com

URL
https://cercec.ehess.fr/en/appel/body-and-care-ordeal-war-socio-historical-pers…

samedi 3 mai 2025

Science et communication

Science and Communication

Call for papers



We are pleased to invite proposals for the Tenth Norwegian History of Science Conference (NHSC10), which is being organized by NVF – The Norwegian Association for the History of Science, and hosted in Bergen, Norway, 5-7 November 2025.


The theme of the conference is “Science and Communication”


About the Conference

The Norwegian History of Science Conference brings together scholars working on the history of science, medicine and technology on any theme, topic, or period to discuss historical, epistemological, political, institutional, and ethical issues of relevance to both Scandinavian and international audiences, welcoming researchers of all nationalities at all stages of their careers. The tenth conference in the series coincides with the 200th anniversary of Bergen Museum, the origins of the University of Bergen, and the local organizers extend a special invitation to those involved in history of science, medicine and technology taking place at museums and collections.

The first Norwegian Conference on the History of Science was organized in Oslo in 2008 with the aim of establishing a national network for historians of science, medicine and technology. Since then, the conference has been hosted biannually in Tromsø, Trondheim, Oslo, and Bergen, and the conference has established itself as a forum for both national and international exchange of ideas and collaboration. At the ninth conference held in Trondheim in 2023, NVF – The Norwegian Association for the History of Science was established to serve as host of the conference.


Theme

The overarching theme of this year’s conference is “Science and Communication”, understood in a broad sense. Twenty years ago, James Secord argued for studying science as communication, stressing the ways that ideas and practices were moved from one place to another. Following his call, historians of science have offered detailed studies of communication devices such as newspapers, public talks and demonstrations, movies, radio, and the internet have shaped what and how we know things. Others have studied ways to communicate, display, or store scientific knowledge and objects, for example in museums and collections. In the museum sector there has been an increased tendency to address ethical issues associated with the origins of their collections. Several studies have also offered new insights into who has been deemed the ideal science communicator, as well as how ideas about science audiences have changed. Last, but not least, a growing number of studies have offered invaluable insights into what knowledge has been deemed not suitable for communication, or what happens when knowledge is produced against the wishes of the scientist.

While the main theme of the conference is “Science and Communication”, papers and panels on other topics related to the history of science, medicine and technology are equally welcome, as the conference aims to reflect ongoing activities in the field and continue to provide an important meeting point.

Keynote lectures will be given by Anne Eriksen from the University of Oslo and Staffan Bergwik from Stockholm University. Eriksen will talk about “Bergen Museum 1825. Knowledge for a Public Sphere”, while Bergwik will talk about “Epochs, Trajectories, Rhythms: Visions of Historical Time and Scientific Knowledge in the 20th Century”.


Guide for contributors


Proposals for individual papers, organized sessions, and alternative types of sessions (such as round tables, workshops, exhibitions or shorter pitching sessions), are welcomed. Ordinary presentations will be scheduled for 20 minutes. No speaker may present in more than one session. Abstracts will be reviewed by the Programme Committee based on their scientific merit and relevance.


Session proposals should include:

● a brief description of the panel’s aims (150 words maximum)

● a session title

● an individual abstract for each paper in the session (250 words maximum)

● full contact details of the organizer and all speakers (including affiliation/postal address and email addresses)

● details of any specific audiovisual equipment required (beyond PPT).


Individual paper proposal should include:

● a paper title

● an abstract (250 words maximum)

● full name and contact details (including affiliation/postal address and email address)

● details of any specific audiovisual equipment required (beyond PPT)



All proposals should be sent as a single electronic document to: historyofscience10@gmail.com. Please note that in-person attendance is expected. The conference language is English, although limited parts of the program may be in Scandinavian languages.



The deadline for submissions is May 15, 2025. A conference website will be set up at https://nhsc10.w.uib.no (in development). For any queries regarding the conference, please contact magnus.vollset@uib.no

vendredi 2 mai 2025

Climat, environnement, psyché et histoire

Climate, Environment, Psyche and History

Call for papers



Conference

Date: October 17, 2025 - October 18, 2025

Location: Michigan, United States



This conference aims to foster interdisciplinary conversations between the humanities (history, literature, philosophy), social sciences, geography, culture studies, health sciences and other fields dealing with a variety of themes related to human encounters with natural and human-made catastrophes. We want to explore the different ways in which scholars approach how individuals and societies experience environmental trauma, as well as the varieties of traumatic experiences with material environments. This can include the effects of climate-induced stress on human health, the impact of pathogens (pandemics and other medical disasters), the consequences of environmental degradation (pollution, destruction of resources) for humans and communities, the myriad effects of militarized and technological violence, and other related events. We look forward to sparking discussions between specialists in historical sites of natural and human-made disasters and scholars who are focused on contemporary case studies of environmental disasters, including the complex effects of the COVID pandemic, overpopulation, contamination of resources, and other current challenges.

While state, medical and institutional responses to climate/environmental-induced stress are a crucial part of investigations into how humans cope with dislocation and disaster, we are particularly interested in the more hidden social, cultural and psychological consequences of diverse forms of trauma and stress. The ways in which humans imagine their environment, their perceptions of material objects (both threatening and invigorating), and the potential for individuals to transform their environment and related objects, requires exploration from a variety of disciplinary and methodological standpoints. The politics of environment trauma, the ways in which culture wars shape perceptions of these events, and the larger environmental concerns that are a backdrop to tensions over colonial power, indigenous rights, and economic exploitation also require innovative new approaches.

This will be a workshop-style conference with a series of panels and plenty of time for focused discussion that will enhance interdisciplinary collaboration.


Questions to explore:

What forms of trauma are experienced as a result of climate/environment disasters?

How do humans cope with traumatic climactic and environmental events?

How does the environment/climate and objects function in the psyche of humans?

How do humans imagine their environment, especially in the wake of traumatic experiences,

whether man-made or natural occurrences?

How do we reconstruct, categorize and investigate historical sites of climate-induced trauma?



Concepts/themes/topics Indigenous environments and colonial genocides
  • Colonial ecologies
  • Contemporary and historical urban environments
  • War landscapes/psyches
  • Natural disasters
  • Pollution/environmental degradation
  • Commodity and resource extraction
  • Global environmental history
  • Environment and mental health
  • Trauma and digital media
  • Transnational and global case studies of climate trauma
  • Environment, trauma and memory



Contact Information

Professor Jason Crouthamel (Grand Valley State University, Michigan): crouthaj@gvsu.edu

Professor Peter Leese (University of Copenhagen, Denmark): leese@hum.ku.dk

Please send an abstract (up to 500 words) and CV to Jason Crouthamel (crouthaj@gvsu.edu) by June 15, 2025.

We will review abstracts shortly thereafter and let colleagues know by July 1st whether proposals have been accepted.

Contact Email: crouthaj@gvsu.edu